| Literature DB >> 34201024 |
Melanie Schubert1, Julia Ludwig2, Alice Freiberg1, Taurai Monalisa Hahne3, Karla Romero Starke1,4, Maria Girbig1, Gudrun Faller5, Christian Apfelbacher3, Olaf von dem Knesebeck2, Andreas Seidler1.
Abstract
Stigmatization from work-related COVID-19 exposure has not been investigated in detail yet. Therefore, we systematically searched three databases: Medline, Embase, and PsychInfo (until October 2020), and performed a grey literature search (until February 2021). We identified 46 suitable articles from 24 quantitative and 11 qualitative studies, 6 systematic reviews, 3 study protocols and 1 intervention. The assessment of stigmatization varied widely, ranging from a single-item question to a 22-item questionnaire. Studies mostly considered perceived self-stigma (27 of 35 original studies) in healthcare workers (HCWs) or hospital-related jobs (29 of 35). All articles reported on stigmatization as a result of work-related COVID-19 exposure. However, most quantitative studies were characterized by convenience sampling (17 of 24), and all studies-also those with an adequate sampling design-were considered of low methodological quality. Therefore, it is not possible to determine prevalence of stigmatization in defined occupational groups. Nevertheless, the work-related stigmatization of occupational groups with or without suspected contact to COVID-19 is a relevant problem and increases the risk for depression (odds ratio (OR) = 1.74; 95% confidence interval CI 1.29-2.36) and anxiety (OR = 1.75; 95% CI 1.29-2.37). For promoting workers' health, anti-stigma strategies and support should be implemented in the workplace.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV2; bullying; corona; discrimination; healthcare workers; nursing; stigma; work
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34201024 PMCID: PMC8226580 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18126183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for the research question concerning work-related stigmatization as outcome (research question A and C).
| Category | Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Population | General working population (all sexes) | Children and youth, unemployed persons or persons in non-paid employment, pensioners, and persons over 70 years |
| Exposure | SARS-CoV-2 (A) | Other infectious diseases such as HIV and tuberculosis 1 |
| Outcomes | All stigmatization forms (including bullying) in association with work (A); measures that prevent work-related stigmatization (C) | - |
1 Results on new respiratory virus diseases other than COVID-19, i.e., SARS, MERS, influenza virus H1N1, and influenza virus H7N9 were excluded in the further study process.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for the research question concerning health consequences of stigmatization (research question B).
| Category | Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Population | General working population (all sexes) | Children and youth, unemployed persons or persons in non-paid employment, pensioners, and persons above 70 years |
| Exposure | Work-related stigmatization (all forms) due to COVID-19 | - |
| Outcomes | Physical and mental health, stigma-reducing strategies | - |
Definition of stigma forms of included studies.
| Stigma Forms | Description | Examples from Included Studies |
|---|---|---|
| Public stigma | Endorsement of stereotypes, prejudices and discrimination against a group, that holds a specific characteristic. In surveys, the public is asked. | Stereotypes: e.g., “Healthcare workers who work in hospitals are likely to have COVID-19” [ |
| Associative stigma | Endorsement of stereotypes, prejudices and discrimination against a group which is transferred to relatives. In surveys, the public or affected persons are asked. | Discrimination: e.g., “Relatives being alienated because employment related to COVID-19” [ |
| Self-stigma (internalized) | Internalization, i.e., perception and transfer of stereotypes and devaluations to the own person. In surveys, affected persons are asked. | e.g., “Felt guilty about possibly exposing family, community and peers to infection” [ |
| Self-stigma (perceived) | Belief that “most people” will devalue and discriminate the stigmatized. In surveys, affected persons are asked. | Stereotypes: e.g., “People do not trust me and worry that I might infect them” [ |
| Self-stigma (anticipated) | Expectation of experiencing prejudice and discrimination due to a specific characteristic. In surveys, (potentially) affected persons are asked. | Fear, perceived consequences: “People would avoid me because of my job” [ |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram. Adapted from: Moher D, Liberati A, Tetzlaff J, Altman DG, the PRISMA Group (2009). Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement. PLoS Med 6(6): e1000097, doi:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed1000097.
Summary of included quantitative studies.
| First Author | Region | Population | Stigmatization Form | Time of COVID-19 Pandemic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chatterjee et al. [ | India | Physicians | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Chaudhary et al. [ | Pakistan | Clinical oral HCWs | Self-stigma (anticipated) | Not specified |
| Chen et al. [ | China | Government/public institution/institutions/state-owned, enterprises, private enterprise staff or individual business | Self-stigma (perceived) | Baseline: rapid increase in COVID-19 cases and related deaths; follow-up: authorities relaxed lowdown |
| Chew et al. [ | Singapore | Medical residents in training (medical and surgical) | Self-stigma (anticipated) | Not specified |
| Dang et al. [ | Vietnam | HCWs, professional educators, white collar workers, students, others | Self-stigma (perceived) | Data collection one week after social distancing and lockdown was ordered by government |
| Do Duy et al. [ | Vietnam | Clinicians, nurses, others | Self-stigma (perceived) | Lockdown of workplace because of COVID-19 outbreak-> all employees required to quarantine for 23 days. Data collection after quarantine |
| Dye et al. [ | Worldwide | n.r. | Self-stigma (anticipated) | Not specified |
| Elhadi et al. [ | Libya | HCWs (doctors and nurses) from 15 hospitals working during the outbreak period | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Elhadi et al. [ | Libya | HCWs working in either surgery, internal medicine, intensive care, or emergency departments | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Greene et al. [ | UK | Frontline health and social care workers working in a variety of healthcare roles in UK hospitals, nursing or care homes, and community settings | Self-stigma (perceived) | During COVID-19 pandemic (post-peak phase of the initial COVID-19 wave in the UK) |
| Juan et al. [ | China | hospital staff from five national COVID-19 designated hospitals (working in isolation ward, general ward) | Self-stigma (perceived) | Study period corresponds with the highest point of the COVID-19 epidemic in |
| Khanal et al. [ | Nepal | Nurses, doctors, paramedics, laboratory staff, pharmacists, public health professional currently working in COVID-19 management | Self-stigma (perceived) | During lockdown |
| Mohindra et al. [ | India | Doctors, nurses, hospital attendants, sanitation attendants, others working at the hospital | Self-stigma (perceived) | During lockdown |
| Monterossa-Castro et al. [ | Colombia | General Practitioners | Self-stigma (perceived) | Responses |
| Ramaci et al. [ | Italy | Nurses and doctors | Self-stigma (perceived) | During national lockdown |
| Said et al. [ | Egypt | Nurses from triage hospital and from a hospital with no triage or isolation | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Sharma et al. [ | USA | HCWs caring for COVID-19 patients (intensive care unit): physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, advanced practice providers | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Tan et al. [ | China | Members of the workforce who returned to work: workers, and technical staff, executives, sales and marketing, management and others> | Self-stigma (perceived) | Returning to work after lockdown and quarantine in Chongqing, during the peak of the COVID-19 epidemic when strict infection control was in place |
| Taylor et al. [ | Canada, USA | Non-HCWs | Public stigma | Not specified |
| Uvais et al. [ | India | Physicians working in hospitals | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Yadav et al. [ | India | HCWs | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Zandifar et al. [ | Iran | HCWs engaged in the field of diagnostic and treatment of COVID-19 patients working in 9 general hospitals (physicians, nurses, technicians) | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Zhu et al. [ | China | HCWs from hospital directly providing services to confirmed or suspected COVID-19 patients (physicians, nurses, technicians) | Self-stigma (perceived) | COVID-19 outbreak (2 weeks after the authority in Wuhan suspended all public transport) |
# invited n. r. = number of invited participants was not reported, CS = cross-sectional study, longitudinal = longitudinal study design.
Summary of included qualitative studies.
| Study | Region | Population | Stigmatization Form | Time of COVID-19 Pandemic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bhatt et al. [ | Nepal | Teachers, students, security personnel, head of household, leaders, health workers, homemaker, others | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Crowe et al. [ | Canada | Critical Care Registered Nurses (CCRN) providing direct patient care in the intensive care and high acuity units in an academic teaching hospital | Self-stigma (perceived) | During the initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic |
| Dye et al. [ | Worldwide | Not reported | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Fawaz et al. [ | Lebanon | Nurses and physicians working at various COVID-19 units | Self-stigma (perceived) | Being quarantined following occupational COVID-19 exposure |
| Feroz et al. [ | Pakistan | Key informants KIIs (senior management and hospital leadership, directly or indirectly involved with the management of COVID-19 patients) | Self-stigma (anticipated) | Not specified |
| Hien et al. [ | Germany | Nurses in clinics and retirement homes | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Kackin et al. [ | Turkey | Nurses caring for COVID-19 patients | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Kalateh-Sadati et al. [ | Iran | Nurses working in hospitals specified for COVID-19 treatment | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Lee et al. [ | South Korea | COVID-19-designated hospital nurses providing direct care for patients | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Reazee et al. [ | Iran | Nurses working fulltime in COVID-19 wards | Self-stigma (perceived) | Not specified |
| Rizvi Jafree et al. [ | Pakistan | Not reported | Self-stigma (perceived) | COVID-19-affected families admitted at three government-allocated hospitals |
| Zolnikov et al. [ | Canada, Ireland, Kenya, USA | First responders/HCWs: nurses, physicians, firefighters, paramedics, police officers, nurse technicians, behavioural therapists, orthodontists, dialysis technicians, technicians in medical surgery, data specialists, emergency medical technicians | Self-stigma (internalized) | Not specified |
Figure 2Risk of depression (A) and anxiety (B) in association with work-related stigmatization from COVID-19 exposure.